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Jaisa Desh, Waisa Vesh? Explorations on the representations of Adivasis in popular Hindi cinema

journal contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by Suneeti Rekhari
This article seeks to discuss specific examples of Adivasi representation in Indian cinema, particularly popular Hindi cinema (as opposed to ‘art’ or ‘parallel’ cinema), and the ways in which it has distilled and codified the representations of ‘other’ groups for a mass audience. Mainstream Hindi cinema, even in its postcolonial phase, has not provided images of Adivasis that reflect their reality. This ‘constructed reality’ of the cinema in which Adivasis exist remains the widespread (mis)understanding of their cultures. It is this cinematic marginalization and cultural stereotyping that will be explored further. This article is a preliminary exploration and will look at particular examples of representation in Hindi films, including Naagin [Female Cobra] (Nandlal Jaswantlal, 1954), Madhumati (Bimal Roy, 1958), Yeh Gulistan Hamara [This Flower Garden of Ours] (Atma Ram, 1972), Lal Salaam [Red Salute] (Gaganvihari Boratte, 2002) and Chak De! [Come On! India] (Shimit Amin, 2007). The aim is for this exploration to provide a foundation for further research into Adivasi representation and the wider discourses of power, politics and inequality in Indian society.

History

Journal

Studies in South Asian film and media

Volume

2

Issue

2

Pagination

107 - 117

Publisher

Intellect

Location

Bristol, England

ISSN

1756-4921

eISSN

1756-493X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2010, Intellect

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